Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 305, 7 October 1919 — Page 5
PAGE riVE
THE RICHMOND PAi.LADl'Ulu ANi sUN-lbi-LGkAM, luzDai, uui. , 13 ii).
Heart and Beauty Problems By Mrs. Elisabeth Thompson
Dear Mrs. Thompson: Does putting cold cream on the eyelids make the las-hos grow longer? If not, what will? Does letting a fellow put his arm r.round you while riding make him lore his respect for you? Why is it iliey always want to do it, and if it is wrong why do they expect to? How do you ask them not to if it is wrong? 3. Is it too familiar to slip fellows on the shoulder? 4. Are ear-dips still popular? THANK VOU. Cold cream would not make the lashes grow longer because it is free from hair growing fats. Use vaseline p.nd apply it in small quantities to tho lashes every night. If the vaseline is put on the lids, the lashes spread and fine hair grows on the lids. To let a boy put his arm around you is an invitation for him to go further. Keep your relationship with boys on a Household Hints GRAPE SEASON Grape Jelly One pound of water, one pound of grapes. Crush the grapes and boil in the water for twenty minutes. Press through a Jelly bag and allow to drain through a flannel bag Test the strained Juice with alcohol to determine the proportion of sugar to use. Bring the grape Juice to boiling, add necessary sugar, and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Continue the boiling until the Jelly point ii reached. Remove from the fire and skim. Pour into hot sterilized glasses, seal and store. Grape Juice (Unfermented) Pick ovor and wash grapes, barely cover with water, and cook until soft and white. Drain through cheese cloth. To each quart of juice add one cup ach of water and sugar. Bring to boiling point, skim, bottle and cork tightly. When cold, dip corks into melted paraffine. Venison Jelly One peck of wild grapes, one quart vinegar, one-fourth cup whole cloves, one-fourth cup stick cinnamon, six pounds of sugar. Put the grapes, vinegar and spices
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A COMFORTABLE HOUSE OR i Straughn, and three miles east of LewWORK DRESS isville on the National road, at Stop 3016 This style is especially suited j 112, at 10 o'clock, to mature figures. The rockets and j Saturday, October 11. band triming may be omitted, andi C. A. Leverton, 2 1-2 miles south of the sleeve may be finished at tleiHiser's station, on the 'taction line, seams to close with buttons or simp I and 4 miles east of Laon. on the W. fasteners. Gingham, percale, lawn,W. Wissler farm, full blood Chester khaki, seersucker, flannelette, repp, ! White Hogs, at 10:30. and ponlin are good for this style. Monday, October 13. The "pattern is cut in seven sizes:! William Wilcoxen, nine miles north 36, 3S. 40, 42, 44, 46. and 48 inches 'cast of Richmond, Duroc hogs, at 1 bust measure. Size 38 requires 514! o'clock. vards of 36 inch material. Width of Bert Souders and H. C. Knode. one "skirt at lower edge is 2'i yards. r"He north of Hagerstown. midway beA pattern of this illustration tween Richmond and Newcastle on mailed to anv address on receipt ofi,he Knode farm, live stock, imple10 cents in silver or lc. and 2c. stamps, merits, etc., on Monday and Tuesday, I October 13th and 14th.
Name Address City Size Address Pattern epartment, Palladium. FLYERS MAKE ROUND TRIP. (By Associated Press") M1NEOLA. N. Y., Oct. 2. Added interest was given to the transcontinental aeroplane race today with the announcement by American flying club officials that lh air service had decided to make the race a return trip affair a 5,400 mile flight, instead of 2.700 miles as originally contemplated. Entrants will start on the return flight two days after the last plane has completed the trans-continental trip, it v as stated. GrapesNuts is ideal for the cereal part of any meal. Greatly relished by children - and good for them. There s a Reason
strictly friendship basis, and then, when you find the man you love, you will have a sweet, untouched love to offer him. When a girl permits promiscuous love-makinu she loses her
discrimination and feels no natural re- j pulsion; it is not natural to want to be j kissed and iovea Dy everyone, Dut many people reach that point. Unless a man loves a girl, he loses his respect for her if she permits him to make love to her. When you do not want a man to put his arm around you, say "Please don't" and If you mean it most men would respect your wishes. If a man lacks delicacy enough to go ahead without your consent, drop him for something more desirable. 3. It is too familiar and rough to slap a man on the shoulder. 4. Ear-dips are losing their popularity. By Mrs. Morton into a kettle, heat to the boiling point and cook until the grapes are soft. Strain through a double thickness of cheesecloth or a Jelly bag, then boil the liquid for twenty minutes. Add the sugar and boil until the jelly consistency is reached which will trke about five minutes. KITCHENETTE COOKERY Lamb Stew Get a pound of lamb a etewing piece. When partly ccoked season with salt and pepper, add three medium sized carrots, cut in thick slices, two onions, cut in sections and six potatoes, cut iu large pieces. Make dumplings of 1 cup of flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, scant cup sweet milk, i teaspoon salt. Mix thoroughly and drop in the stew. Cook until thoroughly done and thicken the gravy with a little flour mixed with cold water. The dumplings should be put in about 20 minutes before the stew is odne. Roll each spoonful of batter in flour before it is dropped in the stew and the dumplings will not be "heavy." This will serve three. Farm Sale Calendar Wednesday, October 3. Mr. and Mrs. Potterf, 2 miles east of Eaton on township road, at 10 o'clock. Clem Gaar, on the old Gaar farm. just north of Richmond, cattLe and hogs and some household goods. Sale and lunch at 12 o'clock. Thursday, October 9. Joseph Lamberson, 3 miles southeast of Straughn, at 10 a. m. Jesso M. McWhinney, 2 1-2 miles south of Richmond and 1 mile west, on tho Wolverton pike. General sale, at 10 a. m. Union County Big Type Breeders' Association, at A. P. Creek farm, five miles northeast of Liberty, 2 miles southwest of Kitchell. Hogs and cat tle, at 12: SO. Wm. Warner and John Hill, admini strators of the estate of the late Jesse Blose, 3 miles south of Hollansburg, i at 10 a. m. W. C. Augspurger, on the Dlllman farm, on Middleboro pike, one mile north of Richmond; cattle, hogs. horses, implements, furniture, etc. At 10:30. Friday, October 10. Russell G. White, one mile north of Middleboro, two miles south of WhiteI water. General clean-up sale. S. W. Pickering, one mile west of M. W. Miles, 22 miles south of Campbellstown, on Wyatt road, at 10 o'clock. Thursday, October 16. Wililam McEntire. l'i mles south of New Madison, O., all live stock, implements, feed, etc., a general clean-up f-ale, at 10 o'clock. Friday, Oct, 17. R. M. Miller, three miles north of Abington. on the Richmond and Abington pike, at 10 o'clock. Monday, October 20. Ed Carmiu, one mile west of NewParis and five miles northeast of Richmond, on the Smyrna road at the state line, llolstein cattle, hogs and general sale: at 10:30 o'clock. Thursday, October 23. Bruce Pullen, 2Vi miles west of Liberty, on the Liberty-Connersville Short Line pike, 'i mile south of Pea Ridge school; at 10:30. Wilson and Kinsey, one mile south of Greensfork on the Washington road, exclusive Big Type Poland China hog sale. Lunch at 11:30. Sale at 12:30. GET THE WOMEN OUT OF UNIFORM, ENGLISH CRY (By Associated Press) LONDON", Oct. 7. Woman in uniform is being made the butt of much criticism throughout England. "It was noble of her to get into it and now she ought to get out on the doublequick" Is a commentary by one critic which may be taken as representative of widespread opinion. News of the County j V I LYNN The high school enjoyed a wiener roast Friday night in the woods of E. B. Johnson, north of town. There were about sixty present. Misses Vada Daly, Florence Byrd and George Alexander acted as chaperones. Every gem known to the lapidary has been found in the United States.
PARIS IS FEATURING SHORT SKIRTS AND
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Paris skirts are still short. That they are full as well as short does rot add to their grace. And that their fulness reaches its widest dimensions over the hips is a state HOUSING PROBLEM ALWAYS HAS BEEN BIG ONE FOR MAN Kansas City Star The housing problem is one that has troubled the sons of men ever since Old Man Stonehatchet wandered over the prehistoric, hillsides with all the little Stonehatchets at his heels. searching for an unoecupied cave. Al- j ways it has been and still is pretty j much of a personal matter, but also it ! has been and still is a personal subject ; for investigators and reformers of ; varying degrees of professionalism. j Individuals and nations have devel-j oped innumerable schemes to supply the world with enough shelter. Some of the ideas have been practical, but the majority have been unworkable be-! cause of cost or local conditions or! freakish designs. j But the field still is open and every day somebody comes forward with ai plan that he feels sure will answer the age-old question. One of the latest of i these hails from New Orleans. ! His idea is to build one-story houses i of re-inforced concrete, eacli room a circular binlike one, with concrete floor : and roof. Each room, according to his scheme, would be a complete house . with a door and three windows or two' doors and two windows. Additional ; rooms one or a dozen could be pro- j vided by setting the standardized bins! a standardized distance apart and con-; necting them with standardized hall-j rooms, or. as he calls them "closet-j apartments.'' ' Thus a man could have his house ! with the circular rooms arranged in a : circle with an outside entrance between each pair or one entrance to the 1 whole, and a door-to-door passagev. -,ty 1 through all rooms. The bins could be j set in rectangles, triangles or anyj other way. almost to conform to the shape of the ground plot.. The inventor asserts they would be proof against, noise, dust. rats, insect?, fire and storm. A company has been formed to place them on the market. Concrete Favorite Material. Tho outstanding feature of most new housing schemes is standardization, which means that every house is to be like every other one, virtually, as fas as size, arrangement, ana outuniu , appearance go. Concrete is a favorite material, because of its easy manipula-, tion and lasting quality. It may be: molded into blocks and used like 1 bricks or stone, or it can be poured ! into forms for the construction of , monolithic houses. j The former method admits of varia-; tions to suit individual taste, hm the : latter is preferred in most large-scale housing plans, because one set of forms can be used for a whole illage, thereby cutting down the cost of building. The British government is using concrete and a standard plan in an eONLY A POWERFUL MEDICINE WILL END RHEUMATISM , It matters not whether you have had agonizing rheumatic pains for 20 years or distressing twitches for 20 weeks, Rheuma is mighty and powerful enough to help drive rheumatic poisons from your body and abolish all misery or the cost, small as it is, will be cheerfully refunded. Druggists everywhere are authorized to sell Rheuma on a no-cure-no-pay basis. It's absolutely harmless and after taking the small dose as directed once a day for two days you should know that at last you have obtained a remedy that will conquer rheumatism. For over ten years throughout America Rheuma has been prescribed and has released thousands from agony. It shoud do as much for you. It seldom fails Adv.
ment ' that dismays tho stoutest ' cers while a few of the more conheart anions women. Bit skirts are servative ones extend almost to tho not tho only thin;.:? which desinm- elbow and a very small number try ers have clipped ofT. Sleeves alsc 1 to reach the wri3t. Pictured are ce very abbreviated, soma of then; j some of th-3 newest creations from stopping- absolutely at the shoui- ; Paris shops.
j tensive housing campaign it has tin- ; der wr.y. The cottages it is building j are monolithic and more or less freak- ! ish in desiirn. but it is a different sort ! of freaki.-hness from that conceived : by the New Orleans man. The Kng- ; lish government r-eems to run largely 1 to the old style thatched cottage idea, which is quaint, but leaves much to be desired in the way of light and air. The modern "thatch," of course is tile or concrete, or even stained shingles, but the effect, when viewed from a little distance, is the same. The houses are being erected in several pans of the British Lies, on hind ac quired from priva'e owners by the ; national government or municipalities, and are to be sold or leased on advan-1 tageous terms. i San Francisco Scheme. ! 1 Another phase of the housing prob-' " Inn is that of providing places for! those to whom price or accessibility to business is no object. There is a wider ianp,e here and it has resultedin plans extending from the exclusive1 residence park, extending far out from ' the cit-. and consisting of cottages, bungalows, or imposing mansions, to ! the apartment hotel far down town, in1 which art and invention vie in devis- ! ing comforts and conveniences. i A San Francisco woman realty operator has planned a novel building in : this field. Her idea is to utilize a steep bluff 2.-.0 Tevt high. On it she proposes to erret a series of apart- ' ments tunning in stairstep fashion ' lrom the street down to the waters of i San Francisco bay. Every apartmen overlooks the roof ot the one next i below it. I It is proposed to have each apart-) ment equipped with its own elevator i entrance, pergola and 1 oof garden.! with a glass-covered inclined eievator, I m ' -re- W. "To bf rca I su rt m y coffee' s pu r. ' Said smiling Mrs Bland I sr ick looce lied C, old rn Sun. " Because I knuw t he trjnj " buy Golden Sun jrsarin and yezv out is not a prcrniumlrat its fee flavor. It is all coffee, pwe. fresh and "wholesome. Your gvocsv soils il Peddlcre and .4 H m do not. The Wool son Spice Co. Tij&edo. Chio
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SHORT SLEEVES
j home Sundav Miss Blanch Renfre connecting all with the private wharf jand Miss Gertrude Hartcr of New for fi.-hing and boating. Other feat- jiafjjson, Ohio. .ires projected are a specially warm-, ylV Noble Gehr and family of Richrcl sea water bathing tank and glass 1 m0nd, and Miss Helen Taylor of Con-
inclosed and heated playground tor iiiiv.-vv ' f .-,- children on the beach. Steam heat, hot wat laundry, garage, billiard. club and ball rooms are to be provided as matters of course. The site commands a fine view of the Golden Gate and the sea outside, according to the prosecptus, and it is said the apartments, which will rent at a price prohibitive for most of us, are already under lease, even before the building has been started. A British naval officer has invented vertical compass to be set level with navigator's eye. wmx em Sample Parlinsc of the Famous Now lrnmld I'ilp Treatment OlS'ered Tree to l'rove What It Mill Ii for ou. Pyramid Pile Treatment gives ! quick relief frnm jfr-hiliir. blPPdl nc or protrurlmc piles, hemorrhoids and Tj-ramid Is Certainly Fine and Works Such Woudors So Quickly. Furh rectal troubles, in the privacy rjf your home, tin ctntH a box at all (iruyists. Take no substitute. A single bo often relieves. 1'ree am Iilo inr Tiial ni.uled in plain wrapper, if you send coupon below. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. C15 l'jramld Bide.. Marshall, Micb. Kinrtlr eprut no n Frc sampl of Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. Name. Street City Stntc
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I to Relieve Hoz.cc Shortage
I (Manchester Guardian) j Southwark is the first place in Lon- , don to make a start with the ministry of health's plan for taking posi session of unoccupied house3 and con- ! vertine them into flats as a means of ! relieving the housing congestion. ! The ministry of health act gives ! the department the rower to make use of empty buildings in this way. c-ither in consultation with the local ; ; authorities or independently where j these are showing insufficient enter-, prise in housing. In London the stage; reached is that all the boroughs have now nrenrired lists of the houses in! their districts suitable tor conversion. Tt mnv sfpm odd that there are anv cmntv houses to convert, but as a mat -
ter of fac t there is a very large num-' commenced taking Tanlac about five ber, usually old houses that have come i weeks ago is simply wonderful, and down in the world and can no longer just seems too good to be true," said be let as they are. which would well; Mrs. Walter Salaway, who lives at repay conversion into flats. j -4.". Burton avenue. Indianapolis, Ind.. The owners of many of them will while talking to a Teniae representanot consent to any interference withitive, the other day. their property, but there are now le-1 "When I first began to suffer from
eal powers to see that the public necessity overrides merely personal objections. The cost of the alterations will be borne by the local authorities who will let thp flats at an economic rent, ir possiDie. Tho ministry is at present examining the many government hostels throughout the country' that are no longer wanted for war purposes, with the view of finding how far they can be used for housing families. If this can be arranged it would be a much quicker way of relieving the housing Situation man autriug rinpiy iiuuarj. Some of these hostels are large places
and could accommodate thousands of sick headache, and nobody except raypeople. Some of the biggest of the ; self will ever know what I Buffered hostels are in London. Many of them i when these spells came on me. It was
of course, wnicn were put up to accommodate munition workers, are not suitably placed for housing people in peace time. Pershing, Ind. Carl Bchr and family of Indianapolis spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Bthr. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Worley and Paul Sebering. of Cambridge City, spent Sunday with Mrs. J. W. Chase. Mr. and Mrs. John Newbo'.d are spending a lew weeks with relatives in Illinois. Mr. leave and Mrs. William Behr will ! Wednesday for Indianapolis,! where they will spend the winter with their son Carl and family. U.ovd Stofer entertained at his t nersville. spent Sundav with Mr. and j a I D liir, d peril i. j uuua it 11 a 1 . 1 Mrs. William Taylor and family. Miss Genevieve Jamieson spent last week with Miss Margaret Chamber - lain at the home of her grandfather. Mr. Henry Doherty north of Centerville. HARPER'S EDITOR DEAD (Dos Moines Re; NEW YORK, Oct. 7.i?ter -Henry Mill? Aiueu eunur 01 nmir. . dav aftPr a lon mneB He was 8 ! years old 1 x i 1 h i.ti 1111-11 si 1 irn iii!- 1 1 r 1 r iw - -
AdmioistFator's Saie ol Real Estate Friday, October 10, 1919 At 2 o'clock p. m. on the Premises The two following properties in the order listed below: No. 313 South 9th Street Consisting of a two-story frame dwelling of 7 rooms, supplied with gas and city water. No. 315 South 9th Street Consisting of a two-story frame house of fi rooms, supplied with gas and city water. These properties are in a good residence action of the city, on an improved street. TERMS OF SALE One-third cash in hand; balance in two equal installments in 0 and IS months : notes to bear fi interest, secured by mortgage on real estate sold or purchaser may pay all cash. For further information see Dickinson Trust Company Ext'r. Et. of Caroline Hofheinz
Meet Us Tomorrow
After Schooi
For 718 Main St-
WAS in bed FOR
3 OR 4 WEEKS ON A STRETCH . . JQ KuXl-LlOWIl DtlC LOUlUll t Even Sit Up Obtains Remarkable Results from Tanlac. ; "The way I have improved since I ; sromacn trouDie, anout tour year ago." continued Mrs. Salaway, "I weighed one hundred and fifty pounds, but when I commenced taking Tanlac I had gone down to one hundred and fifteen, and was so weak and rundown I could hardly stay on my feet, ! In fact, I was in bed a great portion I of my time, and often for as much as ; three or four weeks I couldn't sit up at all. I reached the point where the j only thing I could cat was a soft boiled egg and a little toast, and even that would cause gas to form so bad I could hardly get a good breath. Then, too, I often had bad spells of nervous out of the question for me to get a good night's sleep. I was under treatment, of course, and took many different kinds of medicine, but my condition gradually got worse all the time. "I had read and heard so much about Tanlac that I finally decided to give it a trial, and unless I liad had the experience myself, I would never have believed that any medicine could accomplish such wonderful results in that length of time. Why I never had a better appetite in my life, and I can eat just anything I want without suffering a particle afterwards. I am getting stronger every day. and have no trouDie in aoing an my nousewor. I am rapidly getting back all I lost In weignt, ana my enure system nas Deen greatly built up. And. oh! I am so thankful to tell you that I am free from those awful headaches, and if Tanlac had done nothing more than that, it would have been a real godsend to me. My nerves seem to be in perfect condition, now, and I sleep tine every night. I am so well and strong now that after doing all my ! housework I can get out and take long 1 walks. In fact. I just feel perfectly well all the time, and I am anxiou.for others who suffer as I did to know about this wonderful medicine, and what it has done for me. that I never lose an opportunity to speak a good word for it." Tanlac is sold in Richmond by Clr-m ; Thistlethwaite, in Greensfork by (' ID. Corine, in Cambridge Ci'y by M; i L0En House, in Pushing by Sou: be, . i 1 r-. . I lu 6' " (-a' v ,M v" terville Pharmacy, and in Milton L. j a . Lt. 1 artunr.- .-a. 1 Mi!
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